3 Oct 2020

Disappointment in Pacific regarding Super Rugby snub

7:36 am on 3 October 2020

There's disappointment among the rugby community that next year's Super Rugby competition won't include a Pacific Island franchise.

New Zealand Rugby have confirmed the 2021 competition will run with just the same five New Zealand teams as this year, with the addition of a one-off final.

General views during the Investec Super Rugby Aotearoa match, between the Blues and Hurricanes held at Eden Park, Auckland, New Zealand.  14  June  2020       Photo: Brett Phibbs / www.photosport.nz

The same five teams will contest Super Rugby Aotearoa next year. Photo: Photosport Ltd 2020

The NZR chair, Brent Impey, said none of the Pacific team bids were both competitive on the field and financially sustainable off the field.

"We are not in a position financially - we're running multi-million dollar losses - to subsidise anything, " he said.

"If we've got money it needs to go into our community, it needs to go into our provinces, so I'm sorry we do not have the money to compromise."

All Blacks Chairman Brent Impey.
Steve Hansen's announcement of his decision to step down as All Blacks Head Coach after the 2019 Rugby World Cup.
All Blacks press conference at Heritage Hotel, Auckland on 14 December 2018.
Copyright photo: William Booth / www.photosport.nz

Brent Impey. Photo: Photosport Ltd 2018

Pacific Rugby Players has worked alongside half a dozen prospective bids and chief executive Aayden Clarke felt they would have added something to next year's Super Rugby competition.

"From a players perspective it's pretty disappointing - we just hope now that the following year, 2022, we can get a plan in place and get a team out on the field," he said.

"There was a Fiji-led group, there was the Moana Pasifika group out of Auckland and a number of others who were really ticking some boxes."

Pacific Rugby Players CEO Aayden Clarke.

Pacific Rugby Players CEO Aayden Clarke. Photo: RNZ Pacific/Vinnie Wylie

Putting together a competitive playing roster at short notice was especially tough in the current environment, Clarke acknowledged.

"Nobody wants a hotch-potch team to take the field and want them to be competitive from the start, we understand that," he said.

"But we did think that was possible in 2021 and I know that all organisations who have been working on this have been getting good financial sustainability in behind them to ensure that it's a long-term success."

The Fijian Drua are the defending NRC champions.

A Fijian team is among those keen to join Super Rugby. Photo: Supplied/Fiji Rugby

He also dismissed concerns over a lack of player depth.

"Outside of the current New Zealand contracted players there's some very talented Pacific Island players playing through the Mitre 10 Cup," he said.

"Plus by early next year we would hope that possibly the Pacific Island players who are on island at the moment could have an opportunity to be part of it as well."